Cst 201 70 2

Cst 201 70 2

History of Cinema CST 201; Sec 70 Cedar Crest College; Fall 2009 T 7-10:00 PM; Room: MIL 33 Format: Lecture, Discussion, & Online Dr. Robert A. Wilson Email: [email protected] Office: 113 Hartzel Hall Phone: x3474, off campus dial Office Hours: M & W 6 – 6:50 PM; T & R 10 – 10:50AM 610-606-4666 and by appointment ―Cinema is the most beautiful fraud in the world.‖ --Jean-Luc Godard Machinenmensch & Inventor in Fritz Lang's Metropolis (1927) Course Description: CST 240 History of Cinema surveys major developments in international film culture and aesthetics from 1895 to the present. Topics include the origins of motion pictures and growth during the silent era; the development of narrative cinema; European innovations such as Soviet montage theory or German Expressionism; the rise and influence of sound; the Hollywood studio system; global trends such as post-WWII Japanese, Indian, or Hong Kong films; and the independent, experimental, and media-conglomerate cinemas of today. Books & Course Resources: Kristin Thompson and David Bordwell. Film History: An Introduction. 3rd Edition. Boston: McGraw-Hill, 2009. Timothy Corrigan. A Short Guide to Writing about Film. 7th edition. New York: Pearson Longman, 2009. (Recommended, especially if you have not had CST 130: Introduction to Film or a similar film studies course.) The above books are available through the Cedar Crest College Bookstore but may also be purchased from other vendors. Online retailers (such as www.betterworldbooks.com or www.alibris.com) often sell books at reduced prices. You’ll also want access to the course’s eCollege companion website, which will have digital copies of course materials. We’ll also be using the eCollege site’s threaded discussion features to extend our classroom discussions online. The site is accessed at: www.cedarcresonline.net. To login, you’ll need a user ID and password issued to you from the Cedar Crest Registrar’s Office, sent to your Cedar Crest email account upon first registering for an eCollege or eCompanion course. Your writing for the course should follow the MLA format, so you’ll want to have access to the MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers or a style manual that covers the MLA style. (Corrigan’s Guide to Writing about Film covers the MLA style.) An online companion to Diana Hacker’s Research and Documentation in the Electronic Age, which covers the MLA and research in the Humanities, is available at: www.dianahacker.com/resdoc. See also my ―Guidelines for Writing about Literature and Film.‖ DVD copies of films we’ll be screening this semester are available from commercial venders, and Cedar Crest’s Cressman has many available for viewing. Course Outcomes: The goal of our study together will be to develop an understanding of cinematic history. You’ll also come away with a range of interpretative strategies for understanding film conventions and terminology. Here, then, are the skills that I hope you’ll gain by the end of the course: o You’ll have a knowledge of historical trends in the development of film technology, culture, and aesthetics. o You’ll have an understanding of the cultural significance of film, both a movie’s importance for its original audience and how we understand it today. o You’ll be familiar with a range of film study terminology and the methods by which film scholars analyze a film. o You’ll be able to express your interpretations of a film both verbally (in class discussions) and in writing (online journals, exams, and papers). o You’ll be able to write critical analyses of a film in clear, cogent prose. Course Methods and Assessment: The best way to develop a sense of film history is to watch a broad number of films from different cultures and historical moments. Much of our time each week, then, will be spent screening historically important films and discussing their cultural and aesthetic significance, both in class and via our online journal discussions. Readings from our textbook Film History have been selected to provide a context for understanding our film screenings and engaging in class discussions. You’ll be assessed in History of Cinema through weekly in-class discussion participation, regular online journals (designed to continue class discussion on reading and lecture material as well as processing spectator response to a film), three exams (designed to synthesize course readings, lectures, and discussions toward an understanding of film’s historical and cultural significance), and a final analytical paper (6-8 pages; designed to offer an in-depth analysis of one film from the semester). See further down the syllabus for specifics on assignments, due dates, and participation assessment. Honor Philosophy: The Cedar Crest Honor Philosophy states that students shall uphold community standards for academic and social behavior to preserve a learning environment dedicated to personal and academic excellence. It is based upon the principle that, as a self-governing body, students have the ability to create an atmosphere of trust and support. Within this environment, individuals are empowered to make their own decisions, develop personal regard for the system under which they live, and achieve a sense of integrity and judgment that will guide them through life. Classroom Behavior and Protocol: You’re both encouraged and expected to share your understandings of the films we’ll be discussing together. By sharing our interpretations, my hope is that each of us will develop sharper and more widely considered understandings of cinema history. A discussion—like any conversation worth having—requires both talking and listening, so I ask that we treat each other’s contributions with their deserved respect, consider one another’s interpretations with an open mind, and not attempt to impose a particular point of view on our classmates. You should argue for a particular line of interpretation to which you’re committed, but do so with an openness to other ideas and a respect for disagreement. Since we’ll be spending a good amount of time this semester sitting in the dark and watching movies, it’s appropriate to make note of good classroom film-watching etiquette. While you may certainly laugh, weep, or shriek when appropriate, keep those outbursts to the clowns, tragedians, and monsters on screen, not in the seats around us. No one likes a shushing, neither the shusher nor the shushee. Appropriate classroom behavior is implicit in the Cedar Crest Honor Philosophy. Such behavior is defined and guided by complete protection for the rights of all students and faculty to a courteous, respectful classroom environment. That environment is free from distractions such as late arrivals, early departures, inappropriate conversations, and any other behaviors that might disrupt instruction or otherwise compromise students’ access to their Cedar Crest College education. As we live in an age of increasing technological diversion—the call of cell phones, or the click of mice, ringing in our ear—it becomes easy to forget the good manners of paying attention to those immediately around us. Please remember to silence cell phones and refrain from texting your friends or any wayward browsing of the Internet during class. Attendance: Simply put, you must attend class. Academic Honesty and Plagiarism: You are expected to be honest and truthful in this class. Plagiarism is the act of using someone else’s ideas or words and passing them off as your own without giving credit to the original source. Since a key goal of a college education is to develop and express your own ideas, plagiarism is an extremely serious academic offense. Here’s the official college policy, which stands for this class: It is dishonest to present oral or written work that is not entirely the student’s own, except as may be approved by the instructor. Students must follow the requirements of the instructor regarding when and how much collaboration with other students is permitted. Any language taken from another source, whether individual words or entire paragraphs, must be placed in quotation marks and attributed to the source, following the citation format specified. Paraphrased material from an outside source must also be attributed. In addition, if the student is indebted to another source for a specific perspective or a line of argument—regardless of whether the student has directly quoted the source or not—that debt must be acknowledged. In this class, the penalty for plagiarism and other forms of academic dishonesty is a grade of F either on the individual assignment or for the entire course, to be determined by the instructor based upon the severity of the offense. All cases of plagiarism will be kept on record with Cedar Crest College’s Provost Office. Class Cancellation: If Cedar Crest’s campus is open, you should expect our class meetings to be held. If troublesome weather threatens to close the campus and thus cancel class, you should refer to Cedar Crest’s Inclement Weather Hotline at 610-606-4629 for notification. Of course, you should always use common sense and place your safety first when determining whether or not it’s appropriate for you to drive to campus under such conditions. If I cancel class independently of the campus closing, due to weather or for other reasons, I will send a class-wide email to your Cedar Crest account and (if possible) place an outgoing message on my office voicemail (x3474). College Policy Regarding Learning Disabilities: Students with documented disabilities who may need academic accommodations should discuss these needs with me during the first two weeks of class. Students with disabilities who wish to request accommodations should contact Academic Services. Assignment Format: All formal out-of-class assignments must be typewritten, stapled, and double-spaced with a 12-pt Times New Roman font and one-inch margins.

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